Pat Buchanan on Technology

2000 Reform Candidate for President

US retires space shuttle while China heads for the moon

China has struck multibillion dollar deals to maintain the 10 to 12 percent growth China has been racking up since Deng Xiaoping dispensed with Maoism and launched China on a road to capitalism.

America has not built a nuclear power plant in 30 years.
China has dozens under way. America built Hoover Dam and Grand Coulee Dam in Franklin Delano Roosevelt's first two terms. China just completed Three Gorges Dam, the largest power source on earth.
China used its stimulus money to tie the nation together with a light rail, bullet trains, and highways in infrastructure projects. America used much of her stimulus money to save government jobs. The United States has retired the space shuttle and her
astronauts will hitchhike to a U.S.-built space station aboard Russian rockets. China is headed to the moon. During the Cold War, China was in the grip of a millenarian Maoist ideology that blinded her to her true national interests.

Use anti-trust to fight social poison of media monopolies

Q: You are now the federally recognized Reform Party nominee. $12 million is a lot of money. How do you plan to use it?

A: We obviously will spend it in trying to get our message across to the American people. One is that Hollywood has been
using the First Amendment as a shield law behind which it has been systematically polluting America’s popular culture and poisoning the hearts and minds of children. And I think Clinton and Gore, rather than smashing Microsoft as a monopoly, which
has done virtually nothing to injure the American people, we ought to take a look at the use of these antitrust laws to break up these media monopolies to much smaller sizes, where folks and local
communities can really look at what is being dumped into that community, in terms of social poisons. So I think this is a major issue and I hope we can focus on that, as well as some of these other issues.

Source: CNN interview, “Early Edition”
, Sep 13, 2000

Microsoft is over the top; but they’ll survive Justice case

Q: Good for the American people to try to tame down Microsoft, or bad for the American people? A: Well initially, I thought it was case of, “let’s break up the Yankees. They’ve won five straight pennants and five straight series.” And I
thought the government had overdone it. But the more I saw it, I think that the Justice Department clearly had a case that Microsoft was over the top. It was really using its tremendous power and leverage to sort of crush and drive
out opposition. So I don’t think it’s that serious a matter. I don’t know what they’re going to do to Microsoft, but it’s a great and innovative company, and powerful company. And I think however it comes out, nobody’s going to be
hurt very badly. Microsoft is going to go fine, Intel’s going to do fine, IBM’s going to survive.